The Guardian (USA)

Miami Beach spring break chaos: more than 1,000 arrests as Covid curfew extended

- Associated Press in Miami

Miami Beach officials have warned that the unruly spring break crowd gathering by the thousands, fighting in the streets, destroying restaurant property and refusing to wear masks has become a serious threat to public safety, after 1,000 arrests were made.

At a last-minute meeting, city officials voted to extend a highly unusual 8pm curfew for another week along famed South Beach, with the possibilit­y of extending it well into April if needed, and stressed this wasn’t the typical spring break crowd. They said it’s not college students, but adults looking to let loose in one of the few states fully open during the pandemic.

Law enforcemen­t officers from at least four other agencies, along with Swat teams, were added to help contain the raucous crowds, but it wasn’t enough. After days of partying, including several confrontat­ions with police, Miami Beach officials enacted a highly unorthodox curfew Saturday from 8pm until 6am, forcing restaurant­s to stop outdoor seating entirely, and encouragin­g local businesses to voluntaril­y shut down.

More than half of the arrests were from out of state, said city manager Raul Aguila, adding many were coming “to engage in lawlessnes­s and an ‘anything goes’ party attitude.” He also noted that the crowds weren’t eating at restaurant­s or patronizin­g businesses generating badly needed tourism dollars, but merely congregati­ng by the thousands in the street.

On Saturday night, officers in bulletproo­f vests sent pepper spray balls into a defiant, but mostly non-violent crowd refusing to submit to the curfew that had been enacted four hours earlier. Some people responded by jumping on top of cars, twerking and throwing money into the air.

A military-style vehicle was seen rolling down the palm-tree lined Ocean Drive as outnumbere­d Miami Beach police officers struggled to disperse the raucous crowds on Saturday. Tourists were urged to stay in their hotels and pedestrian­s or vehicles were not allowed to enter the restricted area after 8pm.

By Friday night, police said the partying was out of control. One restaurant was “turned upside down” in the melee, “chairs were used as weapons,” and broken glass covered the floor.

Next door, the iconic bar, the Clevelande­r South Beach, announced it was temporaril­y suspending operations until at least 24 March.

After gunshots were fired, a young woman cut her leg so badly in a stampede that police initially thought she had been shot. “How many more things are we going to allow to occur before we step in,” said Miami Beach police chief Richard Clements.

“We couldn’t go on any longer,” Clements said at Sunday’s meeting, defending the city’s curfew. “I think this was the right decision.”

Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber said he had trouble sleeping at night, worried about the out-of-control parties.

“When hundreds of people are running through the streets panicked, you realize that’s not something that a police force can control,” he said during a commission meeting Sunday.

Local officials have struggled to enforce Covid ordinances. Florida has no statewide mask rules, limits on capacity or other such restrictio­ns, as a result of the pro-business stance of the Republican governor, Ron DeSantis.

“I think there are very few places that have been open as our state have been open,” said Gelber. “We’re in the middle of a pandemic. The virus is still very present in our community. We have 1,000 infections a day on most days.”

One commission­er asked whether a toll could be levied on non-residents to discourage visitors. Several said it was time for a new marketing campaign to help rebrand South Beach, pointing to the small handful of arrests in nearby Fort Lauderdale over spring break.

Local officials and businesses have

struggled to balance courting tourists to boost the economy while doing so safely amid the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic. Local residents complained they spent three to four hours in traffic after bridges were closed during the curfew and some restaurant­s asked for permission to continue food delivery after the curfew.

Miami tourism officials say billions of dollars were lost when the pandemic began last year, canceling spring break and forcing beach closures across the Sunshine state. The city’s tourism arm had just spent $5m on its biggest national advertisin­g campaign in 20 years.

At the same time, local officials banned alcohol from the beach, along with all alcohol sales after 10pm in an effort to curb partying. The city even sent cellphone text messages to tourists warning, “Vacation responsibl­y or be arrested.”

“I just feel like it’s really not fair,” tourist Heather Price told NBC 6. “People paid a lot of money to come all the way out here, just to not be able to do the activities they wanted to.”

--Organizers

 ??  ?? A man talks to a police officer as revelers enjoy spring break festivitie­s despite an 8pm Covid curfew in Miami Beach, Florida. Photograph: Marco Bello/Reuters
A man talks to a police officer as revelers enjoy spring break festivitie­s despite an 8pm Covid curfew in Miami Beach, Florida. Photograph: Marco Bello/Reuters
 ??  ?? Officers enforce the curfew. Photograph: Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevic­h/EPA
Officers enforce the curfew. Photograph: Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevic­h/EPA

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